Estimating Epidemic Incidence and Prevalence from Genomic Data

Author:

Vaughan Timothy G123ORCID,Leventhal Gabriel E45ORCID,Rasmussen David A267,Drummond Alexei J18,Welch David18,Stadler Tanja23

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Computational Evolution, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

2. Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zürich, Basel, Switzerland

3. Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB), Lausanne, Switzerland

4. Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA

6. Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC

7. Bioinformatics Research Center, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC

8. School of Computer Science, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract Modern phylodynamic methods interpret an inferred phylogenetic tree as a partial transmission chain providing information about the dynamic process of transmission and removal (where removal may be due to recovery, death, or behavior change). Birth–death and coalescent processes have been introduced to model the stochastic dynamics of epidemic spread under common epidemiological models such as the SIS and SIR models and are successfully used to infer phylogenetic trees together with transmission (birth) and removal (death) rates. These methods either integrate analytically over past incidence and prevalence to infer rate parameters, and thus cannot explicitly infer past incidence or prevalence, or allow such inference only in the coalescent limit of large population size. Here, we introduce a particle filtering framework to explicitly infer prevalence and incidence trajectories along with phylogenies and epidemiological model parameters from genomic sequences and case count data in a manner consistent with the underlying birth–death model. After demonstrating the accuracy of this method on simulated data, we use it to assess the prevalence through time of the early 2014 Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone.

Funder

Royal Society of New Zealand

European Research Council

Seventh Framework Program

European Commission

Swiss National Science Foundation

Human Frontiers Science Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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